We've all seen the news: we can affect how our brains work. Neuroscience tells us that we can increase our chances of maintaining our mental edge and functional independence throughout our lives. How? By working to keep our brains fit the way we work to keep our bodies healthy.
What you do everyday matters to your brain. The choices you make, your level of physical and mental activity, your social life, diet, and sleep habits-all these things can affect cognitive fitness: a state in which we are performing well mentally, emotionally, and functionally.
Notes from the Lab: Research studies in many countries have found four factors that may predict maintenance of cognitive function.
Everyone knows what a fit body looks like, but fit brains, which don't boast rippled muscles or six-packs, are tougher to distinguish. Brain fitness is a state of mind in which we are performing well cognitively and emotionally. When we're cognitively fit, we're maintaining our mental edge, staying sharp, aging successfully. Brain fitness is not only the absence of disease either Alzheimer's or other types of dementia; it is also the preservation of emotional and cognitive well-being throughout our working years and beyond.
How mental activity improves cognition (and reduces dementia risk in later life) is not entirely clear, but a leading theory is that it sets up a "cognitive reserve" in the brain. Intellectual stimulation drives the brain to develop denser synaptic connections. This in effect makes the brain more flexible, enabling it to use alternate neural pathways to adapt to changing demands and possibly offering some measure of protection from normal or disease-related cognitive changes.
"When we stimulate our brain by actively thinking, we are sculpting our own neural architecture." — Jordan Grafman, PhD, Chief, Cognitive Neuroscience Section, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
Multitasking has become a way of life — and work — for many of us. We check email while on a conference call. Review slides during a meeting. Or talk on the cell phone while we're driving. Doing two or three things at once may have become so second-nature we don't even realize we're doing it. We may not be able to imagine how we would get through our day if not for this capacity to juggle.
Notes from the lab: Even if life sometimes feels like a rat race, people as a rule are a bit more evolved than rodents. But at the most fundamental levels of brain function- the dance of molecules, proteins, and electrical signals that drive cell-to-cell communication in the brain- we're not so different from out four-legged friends. It's reasonable to presume that generally, what's good for their brains is good for ours as well.
So what can we learn from decades of animal research chronicling the brain benefits of "enriched environments" that we can put to use in our lives? If we could create the perfect enriched environments in which to work, what would it include?
Think about how you can adapt your own work-style (and life in general) to incorporate principles of good cognitive health in each of these areas:
There is a long history of research examining animals that are raised in so-called enriched environments — cages that are filled with toys, running wheels and tunnels, and that are shared with other animals. Mice or rats who are exposed to such stimulating environments, which give them ample opportunity for exercising voluntarily, playful exploration, and interacting with others of their species, show significant benefits over animals raised in standard cages without the extra stimulation. Specifically they learn to run a maze faster and more accurately, and to better remember the best path through the maze.
When researchers look at the brains of animals raised in these complex environments, they find increased numbers of synapses, larger blood vessels, higher levels of neuron-supporting brain chemicals, and other physiological changes indicative of improved neural functioning. Enrichment of this sort even boosts the number of new neurons that are generated in the hippocampus, a phenomenon that is associated with better learning.
Write it down.
Putting your goals in writing makes them more meaningful. Adding why you want to achieve each goal is a real motivator.
Take baby steps.
You'll feel overwhelmed if you try to address every aspect of brain health at once. Set priorities.
Give yourself a timeframe.
And remember: That implies giving yourself enough time to work at and master your goals.
Be realistic.
People who try to do too much too soon often get discouraged and give up altogether. Don't be a victim of your own ambition. If your goals seem impossible, revise them.
Now, determine your baseline. Think about how you measure up against the healthy brain practices below.
Social Interaction
Who did I see today, and for what purposes?
What did I do to reconnect with someone I care about today?
Excerpted from Your Brain at Work, the Dana Alliance for Brain Initiatives and The Conference Board. Used with permission. All rights reserved. www.dana.org. http://www.conference-board.org.


It is important for brain injury survivors to exercise not only their bodies, although physical exercise should never be diminished, but also their mental aptitude should be challenged. As a survivor I must point to activities that help your cognitive on-line thinking like games such as chess or scrabble to keep your brain firing out new ideas or strategies. Also, reading articles in the paper and even watching debates on TV can encourage you to form your own opinion, while forcing your brain to be cognitively fit. I also agree that social interaction is important because it urges individuals to keep their opinion making neurons firing when creating, or even maintaining relationships.
Aug 25th, 2009 2:20pm